Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Trump says he is firing Lisa Cook, a Federal Reserve governor, over alleged mortgage fraud claims – as it happened

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Key events

Closing summary

This brings our live coverage of the second Trump administration to an end for the day, but we will be back early Tuesday. In the meantime, here are the latest developments:

  • Donald Trump wrote to Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook on Monday, telling her that he was removing her from her position “effective immediately”. The US supreme court suggested in May that the president might not have this power.

  • Unprompted, Trump said three times that he plans to rebrand the “Department of Defense” by returning to the pre-1947 name, the “Department of War”.

  • In a court filing, the Trump administration said that it intends to withdraw federal approval for an offshore wind farm off the coasts of Maryland and Delaware.

  • A large bruise on the back on Trump’s right hand, which the president appeared to be hiding, poorly, under a daub of makeup last week, was clearly visible during public appearances, renewing speculation that the White House might be concealing information about his health.

  • California Republicans went to court to challenge a plan devised by the state’s governor, Gavin Newsom, to redraw congressional boundaries in response to a redistricting plan that aims to give Republicans in Texas five more US House seats.

  • Video recorded for a Fox News streaming documentary about Trump proves that the president lied when he told reporters that Maryland’s governor, Wes Moore, had hugged and praised him at the Army-Navy football game in December.

  • The Utah legislature will need to rapidly redraw the state’s congressional boundaries after a judge ruled Monday that the Republican-controlled body drew them in violation of voters’ rights.

  • Kilmar Ábrego García, who was mistakenly deported to a maximum security prison in El Salavador earlier this year, was detained after reporting to Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Baltimore, just three days after his release from criminal custody in Tennessee. Ábrego faces deportation to Uganda – which his lawyers are challenging – after resisting pressure to plead guilty to criminal charges and be deported to Costa Rica.

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